'This Week' Transcript: WH Sr Adviser Valerie Jarrett

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Health insurance reform becomes law in the
United States of America.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

TAPPER: While Republicans vow to overturn it in Congress or the courts.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

(UNKNOWN): President Obama signed away another share of Americans'
freedom.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

TAPPER: The president says, bring it on.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

OBAMA: My attitude is, go for it.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SEN. JOHN MCCAIN, R-ARIZ.: Right, Mr. President. We're going to go
for it, and we're going to repeal this bill.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

TAPPER: Is this the final nail in the coffin for bipartisan
cooperation in Washington? And what's next on the president's agenda?
Questions for our exclusive headliner, the president's senior adviser,
Valerie Jarrett. Then, states sue to block health care reform. Two key
governors on opposite sides of the fight, Mississippi Republican Haley
Barbour and Pennsylvania Democrat Ed Rendell, a "This Week" debate.

Plus, a standoff with Israel and (inaudible).

That and all the week's politics on our roundtable, with George
Will, Democratic strategist Donna Brazile, Peggy Noonan of the Wall
Street Journal and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman.

And as always, the Sunday Funnies.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DAVID LETTERMAN, TALK SHOW HOST: Congress passed the health care
reform bill. Well, that was easy.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

TAPPER: Good morning, everyone. Thank you so much for joining us.
We are joined now by senior adviser to the president, Valerie Jarrett.
Valerie, welcome to This Week.

JARRETT: Thank you, Jake. Good morning.

TAPPER: Good morning. I want to get to the president's big
accomplishment in a second, but first, front-page headlines right now
about Iran. What can you tell us about the reports that Iran is
suspected of preparing to build two nuclear sites, defiantly against
international law, and what is the Obama administration prepared to do
about it?

JARRETT: Well, what I can tell you is what the president has said
consistently, which is that we're going to continue to put pressure on
Iran. The fact that the president and Russia are about to sign the
START Treaty is a good sign that we're making cooperation and good
progress with countries such as Russia. We're going to have a coalition
that will really put pressure on Iran and try to stop them from doing
what they're trying to do.

TAPPER: You're talking about we're going to have a coalition that
will do that. The President Obama set a deadline for President
Ahmadinejad of Iran of the end of 2009. We're now about a quarter of
the way through 2010, still no major international cooperation putting
pressure on Iran. You know a little bit about Iranian culture. Don't
you think that this in some ways conveys weakness or the inability to
rally international support?

JARRETT: Quite the contrary. In fact, over the last year, what
we've seen, when the president came into office, there was a unified
Iran. Now we're seeing a lot of divisions within the country, and we're
seeing steady progress in terms of a world coalition that will put that
pressure on Iran. So no, I think that we have a strong force in the
making, and Iran will back down.

TAPPER: When are we going to see sanctions in the United Nations?

JARRETT: Well, we'll see. As I said, we have a START Treaty that's
good progress. We have a number of countries, 44 countries coming to
the United States at the request of the president to focus on nuclear
proliferation, and as we begin to forge those relationships and they
strengthen, that will enable us to put the pressure we believe is
necessary on Iran.

TAPPER: OK. Turning to the president's big achievement of the last
week, health care reform. Let me show you some numbers from today's
Washington Post. Indicates that 50 percent of the American people
oppose this new law; 46 percent support it. Those can't be numbers that
you're happy about for the president's major domestic legislation.

JARRETT: Well, look, the fact of the matter is, this has been a
long and challenging process. There has been a lot of negative rhetoric
that we've heard around the country. But what we are sure of is that
this is as the American people begin to understand what's in this
package, when they begin to see the benefits, when small businesses are
able to take tax deductions and hire new employees as opposed to having
to struggle to make ends meet; as mothers who have children with
preexisting conditions are now going to be covered and not be
discriminated against by their insurance companies; as we begin to put
in more practices so that the premium costs don't escalate and the
out-of-pocket costs come down; not to mention the enormous way that
we're going to bring down the national deficit as the result of health
care reform, we are confident that the American people will support
this. It's good for them. As you go around and you start talking about
the individual components of this bill, we're seeing overwhelming support.

TAPPER: Let me show you some other numbers, because in recent days,
some companies have announced they're going to have to take significant
write-downs because of the new health care law, specifically the change
in what companies can deduct because of the Medicare prescription drug
benefit. AT&T says they're going to have to take down a write-down of
$1 billion. Deere & Company, $150 million. Caterpillar, $100 million.
3M, up to $90 million. AK Steel, $31 million. Are you concerned at all
about the impact this could have on job creation?

JARRETT: No, and let me tell you why. And I'm glad that you
brought it up. First of all, what they're going to have to write off is
nothing compared to the enormous financial benefits to those very same
companies by health insurance reform that will bring down their costs
substantially.

The Congressional Budget Office says so, as well as independent
consultants that have been hired by the same companies that you just
mentioned.

But let's talk about what that is, exactly. Companies are allowed
to deduct the amount that they spend on prescription drugs. So if you
spend $100, the company does, they're allowed to deduct it. In 2003,
Congress passed a law that said we're going to provide a subsidy to
those very same companies 28 cents on the dollar for every dollar that
they spend, but we still allow them to deduct the entire dollar. And so
what we're saying now is that you're not going to be able to both take
the 28 cent subsidy from the federal government and deduct the entire
amount. And so, I think it's fair. And I think if you look at the
other ways that they're helping business, there's going to be a $5
billion pool for reinsurance. We're taking a number of measures that
will dramatically reduce the cost of business. So on balance, business
will come out way ahead, and that was one of the president's objectives.

And the final point on this is we had many conversations with the
Business Roundtable, a group that represents the 200 largest companies
in the country. They said, look, would you mind if you -- could you
push it back another year so that the effective date is in 2013, not
'12? And we did that. But keep in mind, where I come from, a billion
dollars is still a lot of money, but the fact of the matter is, AT&T is
-- that's the amount that is calculated that they would pay beginning in
2013 over a three-year period.

TAPPER: OK, this is a very large and bold and wide-reaching piece
of legislation. And obviously, CBO, the Congressional Budget Office and
others, can predict what's going to happen, but we don't really know
what's going to happen. Is the president willing to go back and
fine-tune or change parts of the legislation if there are side effects,
if there are things that don't work out the way we want them to work out?

JARRETT: Well, look, let's try what we've put in place. As a past
practice, the Congressional Budget Office tends to be very conservative,
and usually the cost savings are even greater. But as with any big
piece of legislation, down the line, if we want to make refinements and
be flexible, of course.

TAPPER: OK.

JARRETT: But I think a lot of hard work has gone into this plan.
It's been an arduous process. The president has listened to all
voices. We have made numerous improvements to the plan as a result of
that process. Now let's let it work.

TAPPER: In the wake of the health care reform legislation, there
have been threats of violence and some acts of violence against members
of Congress. And in this fund-raising solicitation I want to ask you
about -- this is from the president's political arm, Organizing for
America -- used to be Obama for America -- Mitch Stewart, the director,
writes in this fund-raising solicitation, "A conservative blogger posted
the home address of Congressman Tom Perriello, urging Tea Partiers to
drop by. Other members have had death threats. Democratic offices have
been vandalized. Please chip in $5 or more to defend health reform and
those in Congress who fought to make it possible."

Obviously, those threats and the acts of violence should be
condemned, they are not appropriate. But is it appropriate for
Democrats to try to raise money off of those threats?

JARRETT: Look, let's go back to the threats for a second. I think
that what's great about our country is that we're able to have an open
and free debate about issues and ideas, and once a decision is made, we
always come together and move forward. And what the president is
interested in doing is moving forward.

This is a major accomplishment.

TAPPER: Right, but what about trying to raise money off of the
threats? Is that appropriate?

JARRETT: You know, I can't comment on what the political arms are
doing. What I can tell you is where the president is and what the
president is interested in doing is moving forward with our next
challenge. Health care was a huge accomplishment, but we still have
many challenges ahead of us. We signed a jobs bill last week. That's
really important, to provide tax credits to small business. We now have
the president will be signing as a result of the reconciliation bill for
health care and education, providing help for kids to go to college. We
want to increase the number of children who are able to graduate from
college, and funds for teacher training and for community colleges and
enabling our kids to get scholarships. There are so many important
things, not to mention regulatory reform. So I think the president's
view is, let's be positive, let's move forward, and let's improve our
country.

TAPPER: We only have time for one last question. I want to talk
about the tensions with Israel that have emerged in the last few weeks.
President Clinton perhaps came closer than any other president when it
came to bridging the divide between the Israelis and the Palestinians,
and he said this about negotiating peace between Israel and the
Palestinians. He said, "The first time I met Prime Minister Rabin after
I was elected president, I told him that if Israel would take risks for
peace, America would do everything in its power to minimize those
risks. Well, Israel has and we have done our part. We have built a
bond of trust with Israel and its people that has given it the
confidence necessary to make peace." Does that bond of trust exist
between President Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu?

JARRETT: Absolutely. Absolutely. The United States is a strong
and ardent ally of Israel. The fact of the matter is that friends can
disagree, and I think what's important is that world leaders are able to
sit down with one another, have frank conversations and move forward. I
don't think there is any doubt in the mind of Bebe Netanyahu about the
president's commitment to Israel and its safety, and how important it is
for the United States and for the region.

TAPPER: All right, Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser to President
Obama, thanks so much for joining us.

TAPPER: And while health care reform is written and signed here in
Washington, D.C., it will become reality out in the states. And we're
joined now, from the states, from Jackson, Mississippi, by Governor
Haley Barbour and Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell joins us from
Baltimore.

Gentlemen, welcome to "This Week."

BARBOUR: Thank you, Jake.

RENDELL: Nice to be here, Jake.

TAPPER: Just by way of clarification, Governor Barbour supports
suing the Obama administration and the Congress for the new health care
reform law. He believes that it is unconstitutional, the provision that

requires everyone to get health insurance.

His state attorney general is a Democrat, and it's unclear whether
or not he's going to go forward.

Governor Rendell, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, is in the opposite
position. He opposes a suit and his Republican attorney general in that

state is going forward with a lawsuit.

Governor Barbour, I'd like to start with you. As you know, a lot of

legal experts think that this lawsuit is folly. We asked the former
solicitor general for President Ronald Reagan, Charles Fried, what he
thought about this lawsuit, and here's what he had to say.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

CHARLES FRIED, FMR. U.S. SOLICITOR GENERAL: Anybody who proposes
something like this is either ignorant -- I mean, deeply ignorant -- or
just grandstanding in a preposterous way.

TAPPER: What is your response to the former solicitor general for
Ronald Reagan?

BARBOUR: The solicitor general that needs to quit sugar-coating it.

(LAUGHTER)

No, the fact of the matter is this is an issue that is under our
Constitution, where the powers of the federal government are limited;
does the federal government have the power and authority to require,
force every citizen to buy a product, in this case health insurance?

And in this case, it's not only you must buy a product called health

insurance; you must buy a product that has been approved by the United
States government, and the price of that product will be fixed by the
United States.

I do not believe the United States government has a right, it has
the authority or power to force us to purchase health insurance any more

than, in the name of homeland security, they can force every American to

have to buy a gun.

TAPPER: Governor Rendell, your response?

RENDELL: Well, the solicitor general is absolutely right. This is
a frivolous lawsuit. It's a waste of taxpayers' dollars at a time when
all the states are fighting to preserve those dollars.

Look, the commerce clause says you can not only regulate interstate
activity; you can regulate intrastate activity when it's part of a broad

scheme and it's necessary to do so.

Look, the only way health insurance companies -- and, by the way,
this is not a government takeover. We left the private health insurance

companies intact.

The only way they can afford to give coverage to people with
pre-existing conditions, people who get sick or college kids up to 26
who are staying with their parents -- the only way they can afford to do

that is if everyone goes into the insurance pool. It's easily within
the power of the federal government. These lawsuits are frivolous.

TAPPER: So, Governor Rendell, I want to ask you a question. One
side effect of expanding insurance coverage to so many millions of
Americans at once is that the system is unprepared for it; there simply
aren't the doctors; there simply isn't the infrastructure.

And in fact, after Massachusetts passed its health care bill, new
patients now have to wait 44 days to see a primary care physicians, and
only 44 percent of internists are accepting new patients.

How are you going to sell that to Pennsylvanians?

RENDELL: Well, first of all, there's a phase-in. The mandate
doesn't occur right away, as you know, Jake, so there's a phase-in, and
there's time to build up, number one.

Number two, an important part of this bill is increasing payments
under Medicaid to primary care physicians. We're going to create more
primary care physicians. And in this bill, were' also empowering
nurses. A certified nurse practitioner can do a lot of things that a
primary care physician can do.

So the phase-in was very important here. There are some thing that
happen right away, some benefits. No kids can get denied for
pre-existing conditions as of September.

I don't know if you read about the little kid outside of Dallas who
was born with a defect and the insurance company denied coverage because

he had a pre-existing condition. That stuff is over.

Kids who are 26 years of age or younger living at home, like a lot
of our kids are who can't get jobs -- they're going to get coverage.

So there's a phase-in for some things, but the things that are
really important in insurance reform happen very quickly.

TAPPER: Governor Barbour, I don't want to pick on Mississippi, but
I should point out that studies indicate Mississippi is last in the
nation when it comes to health care, when it comes to access, quality,
costs and outcomes.

Your state ranks worst in the country for obesity, hypertension,
diabetes, adult physical inactivity, low weight birth babies. It has
one of the highest rates of infant mortality.

You've been governor for six years. I'm wondering, what's your
response to critics who say that this is probably -- this lawsuit is
probably not the best use of your time when it comes to health care for
your citizens?

BARBOUR: Well, the fact, my state has about the same percentage of
people who are covered by health insurance as the nation as a whole, so
the issues that you talked about are not the result of lack of health
insurance. In fact, Ed mentioned some very important good things. That

is, allowing children to stay on their parents' insurance until they are

26. BlueCross/BlueShield, which writes most of the health insurance in
my state, already does that. They are now -- two years ago, they were
not going to disqualify people from buying the health insurance because
of preexisting illnesses. They already do that. We already have a
high-cost or high-risk insurance pool in our state. So the problem here

is some people think nothing matters unless the federal government
requires it by law.

Now, a lot of states, like my state, have made real progress here.
Our friends at Utah in two years have more than 40,000 people on the
health insurance exchange. The president wants us and demands in this
policy -- in this law, that we all have health insurance exchanges. We
were in the process of putting one together in Mississippi, except now
we won't be able to do it like Utah. We're going to have to do it more
like Massachusetts, because the federal government says you not only
have to have one, you've got to do it the federal government's way. We
don't believe that's right for every state.

TAPPER: Governor Rendell, you saw the numbers that I cited to
Valerie Jarrett, 50 percent of the American people oppose this bill; 46
percent support it, in today's Washington Post. The latest Franklin and

Marshall poll from your state says that Pennsylvanians view President
Obama, more of them, unfavorably than favorably for the first time. No
offense, you're not doing much better. Democrats in the Keystone State
have a tough road ahead of them. Doesn't this bill hurt their chances
in November?

RENDELL: No, I think as the months roll by, it will actually help
our chances. As more and more people get to understand what's in this
bill, people are going to like it. As someone who's got a 25-year-old
daughter at home who can't get health coverage understands that they can

right now, they're going to like the bill. When someone has a child who

gets ill in September and all of a sudden the insurance company can't
deny them coverage, they're going to like the bill. Small businesses,
businesses under 25 employees, they can file for tax credits that will
help them substantially now. They're going to like the bill. So as all

of these benefits roll out, Jake, it's going to change public perception

of the bill and of the president himself.

And look, no one is kidding themselves. It's a tough year for
incumbents, whether it's the president of the United States, it's the
governor, it's mayors. It's a tough year for incumbents. When the
economy is bad, it's always the case. But this bill is going to be like

Social Security and Medicare, that were demonized, demonized when they
were passed, but later went on to be a godsend to American seniors. And

I think that you will find that that's what this will happen as we roll
out.

And I think losses in November are going to be a lot less than most

of the prognosticators are foretelling.

TAPPER: Governor Barbour, there was some good news for Democrats in

the Washington Post poll that I wanted to ask you about. And it does
suggest that maybe the party, according to some critics, miscalculated,
both in terms of policy, by walking away -- there aren't as many
Republican ideas in the bill -- and politics. Just listen to these
numbers. In February, on the generic ballot, Republicans led Democrats
48 percent to 45 percent, but now, after the bill has passed, the
Democrat leads 48 percent to 44 percent. Doesn't that suggest that
maybe your party miscalculated, both in terms of the fact that the law
is now the law of the land and probably -- let's not kid ourselves -- it

will be for a long, long time -- and in terms of the politics, in terms
of the fact that this is not hurting Democrats as much as you thought it

would.

BARBOUR: Well, in fact, I think Ed's got it just backwards. You
mentioned to Valerie Jarrett, we've now learned that big corporations
are going to have to take $14 billion worth of write-offs, according to
the Towers Watson (ph) estimate, $14 billion worth of write-offs that
nobody knew about, and that's how many jobs are those $14 billion of
losses on corporate balance sheets, how many jobs are they going to
cost? We're going to learn a lot more about this deal. We're learning
already where they said that small businesses that didn't cover their
employees would have to pay $750 per employee. Now it turns out when
you read the bill, if you have the average employee in Mississippi who
makes $32,000 a year, if the cost of health insurance is more than
$3,000 for that employee, the small business will have to pay $3,000,
not $750, four times as much.

As people find out these sorts of things, this bill is going to
become even more unpopular. And candidly, I am surprised that the
numbers in the Washington Post poll weren't better. I mean, since this
thing passed last weekend, we have seen the longest wet kiss in
political history given to the Obama administration by the liberal media

RENDELL: -- because it's getting pounded in the media. A lot of
the media is pounding the bill.

TAPPER: We only have a couple of minutes, Governor Rendell--

(CROSSTALK)

TAPPER: Go ahead.

RENDELL: The bottom line is, Haley only talks about the things that

turn out to be surprising on the negative side. There are a lot of
terrific things on the positive side, as Valerie Jarrett so aptly put
it, and we're finding out in states, there are a lot of good things in
the states here, things that help us financially as well as the things
that cause us extra burdens.

So look, there is a lot to learn about this bill, but on balance,
the CBO -- which the Republicans depend on -- say it's good for the
country, it's going to cut the federal deficit, it's going to bend back
the health care cost curve. And just think of all of the Mississippians

and Pennsylvanians who are going to get coverage that didn't have it,
who aren't going to get denied because they have a previous condition,
who can't get dropped. These are great things. It's a step forward for

America like none we've seen in the last decade.

TAPPER: OK, we only have a couple of minutes left. And I would
sued for journalistic malpractice if I didn't ask you two political
animals a couple of political questions that don't necessarily have to
do with health care reform.

Governor Rendell, I'll start with you. Your colleague, David
Paterson, from New York, it's hard to look at his gubernatorial ship
right now and think it's anything but a disaster and hurting Democrats
in New York and perhaps even nationwide. Should he resign?

RENDELL: No, first of all, Andrew Cuomo is going to get elected
governor of New York here, regardless of anything that's going on,
because he's a great public servant. But Dave Paterson's got, like
Haley, like I do, about eight or nine months left, and I think there
would be more havoc if he stepped down. The lieutenant governor right
now wasn't elected. David Paterson and the people around him I think
are OK to finish the term.

TAPPER: Governor Paterson wasn't elected either, but moving on to
Governor Barbour, I'll ask you a question.

RENDELL: He was elected lieutenant governor. He was elected
lieutenant governor.

TAPPER: OK, fair enough. Governor Barbour, very, very quickly.
Does the presence, the continued presence in the Senate of David Vitter,

your colleague from -- your former colleague from Louisiana, and John
Ensign, does that hurt your party's ability to claim the mantle of
family values, and does it hurt your ability to tar the Democrats as
being part of a culture of scandal?

BARBOUR: Well, I'll just say, I think David Vitter will be
reelected this year by the people of Louisiana because he's a good,
solid conservative who votes the positions that the people of Louisiana
want. I'm not as close to Nevada, but Senator Ensign is not up this
year anyway.

I can't help, though, but not go back to something that Governor
Rendell said. Ed and I are good friends, seriously, but the idea that
the CBO has scored this bill to say that it's going to reduce the
deficit is one of those things that the news media has helped the
administration cover up. In the next few weeks, we're going to pass --
the Congress is going to pass a law that increases by about $220, $230
billion what we pay physicians under Medicare.

TAPPER: Governor, I'm sorry--

BARBOUR: Everybody knows it's going to happen, and it's just -- but

with it, this is not a deficit-reducing health care bill, and people
ought to tell the facts about it.

TAPPER: Governor Barbour, Governor Rendell, that's all the time we
have. We're over time in fact. Thank you so much for joining us.
Enjoy your Sunday. The roundtable is next with George Will, Donna
Brazile, Peggy Noonan and Paul Krugman, and later the Sunday Funnies.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Violence and threats are unacceptable. They
have no place in a political debate.

REP. NANCY PELOSI (D-CA), SPEAKER: Some of the actions that took
place must be rejected.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I hope you die.

REP. ERIC CANTOR (R), VIRGINIA: Enough is enough. It has to stop.
We need to move forward and get back to addressing the important issue
facing our nation and let law enforcement handle these situations.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

TAPPER: Some of the uglier repercussions from the health care
reform vote. And joining us to talk about that and all the week's
politics, as always is George Will, Peggy Noonan of "The Wall Street
Journal," Paul Krugman of "The New York Times" and Democratic strategist
Donna Brazile. Everyone, thank you so much for joining us. George,
we're going to start with you. This is a big win for President Obama,
isn't it?

GEORGE WILL, ABC NEWS CONTRIBUTOR: Huge. It expands the dependency
network in the country, which I think is the Democrats vocation,
certainly changes the relations between the citizen and the state, more
than anything since Medicare 45 years ago. But it also reminds
Americans why they more often than not produce divided government
because they like to see the government not take such giant steps.

Furthermore comes after the stimulus, it comes after TARP, after
General Motors and Chrysler, so it's part of a pattern that is worrying
a lot of people. And furthermore now that insurance companies are going
to be essentially public utilities, now that the Obama administration
owns the health care system, every disappointment with that system and
their constant in a complex system is going to be laid at their
doorstep. So I think this will be a poison chalice.

TAPPER: Wait Donna, that's not what I had in mind when I said this
is a big victory for President Obama. What is your take?

DONNA BRAZILE, DEMOCRATIC STRATEGIST: Well, it's a victory for the
American people. It's a victory for the uninsured, the underinsured and
those with insurance. It saves lives, saves money, extends the life of
Medicare. So I think this is a victory for the president. It's also a
victory for the House Democrats, as well as Senate, and demonstrating
that they can govern, they can get something big, and something
complicated done.

TAPPER: Peggy, Republicans are talking about repealing it, they're
talking about challenging it in court. How realistic are these both as
campaign slogans and as actual lines of attack?

PEGGY NOONAN, WALL STREET JOURNAL: I don't know. I think it is
very interesting that we have debated this bill every day for one year.
The president has put forward his case again and again. He just won.
It was very close, but he won, and yet, the American people still,
according to the polls, don't like this bill. The president, just after
his great victory, is forced to come forward and speak now and tell the
American people, no, it was really good, you're really going to like
this thing. So I do think he is in a difficult position. It seems to
me positions are hardened and they have over the past year. The
Republican Party and the Democratic Party will be looking at the country
and saying, experience now the wonder of this bill. Is it more burden
or more benefit? They will be talking to the center, trying to convince
the center of their case.

TAPPER: Paul, I'm sorry.

NOONAN: Go ahead.

TAPPER: Paul, you heard Governor Barbour say that this is not going
to reduce the deficit. And you're the only person I know with a Nobel
Prize in economics. And I want to put up something that the former
director of the Congressional Budget Office wrote in your newspaper,
Doug Holtz-Eakin.

"In reality, if you strip out all of the gimmicks and budgetary
games and rework the calculus a wholly different picture emerges. The
health care reform legislation would raise, not lower federal deficits,
by $562 billion."

PAUL KRUGMAN, NEW YORK TIMES: That was a shameful column on the
part of Doug Holtz-Eakin. You can just go through it and see that he
made assertions. They're just not true. He's not commenting on the
reality. He's commenting on what the Congressional Budget Office was
based on. And if you look at the things he said, he says it's 10 years
of taxes for six years of benefits. That's just not true.

Most of the taxes don't start up until the time the benefits do.
That's just wrong. The odds are this is going to actually be better
than the CBO numbers say. Because there are things that are uncertain
and the CBO scores them as zero because we don't know if they work. But
some of them will work. Above all, it's amazing. Think about people on
the right. They're simultaneously screaming, they're going to send all
of the old people to death panels and it's not going to save any money.
That's a contradictory point of view.

TAPPER: Death panels would save money, theoretically.

KRUGMAN: The advisory path has the ability to make more or less
binding judgments on saying this particular expensive treatment actually
doesn't do any good medically and so we're not going to pay for it.
That is actually going to save quite a lot of money. We don't know how
much yet. The CBO gives it very little credit. But most of the health
care economists I talk to think it's going to be a really major cost
saving. I have to say, I'm wearing an FDR tie in honor of the fact that
we have gone from the New Deal to the Big Biden Deal, I guess we're
allowed to say.

TAPPER: Big bleeping deal?

KRUGMAN: Yes.

TAPPER: Peggy?

NOONAN: Two things. One is I think execution, the ability of a
government already too busy, involved, overburdened, to successfully
execute this huge 2,300 page thing that nobody seems still to know fully
what is in it. It is interesting to me that the American people now are
getting it off the Internet. I'm getting lots of e-mails saying what
the heck is this and what the heck is that. We have been talking about
this bill for a year, but right now we're in the stage where everybody
starts to read it and question it which I think is good --

(CROSSTALK)

NOONAN: Try to read something on your computer. That's complicated.

KRUGMAN: A lot of people are saying Romney care has just passed.
This is essentially identical to the Massachusetts health reform. There
are really no significant differences. We know it can be worked.
Massachusetts, you know, there are problems with it, but it's not an
unworkable system. This is what legislation looks like. I do
international trade stuff. Somebody should look at a trade agreement
which typically runs at 23,000 pages. This is nothing much.

WILL: First of all, Paul's prizes in economics not practical
Washington wisdom. No one that I know, Paul, thinks the Cadillac tax
that's been kicked down the road on the expensive health care plans
until 2018 will ever be enacted.

No one thinks the Medicare cuts are ever going to be enacted. One
of the ways this simple workable legislation is going to be made to work
is the IRS is going to hire about 16,000 new agents to chase the
American people around to make sure they pay their mandatory fees.

One half, approximately one half of the 35 million or so people who
previously uninsured who are not going to be uninsured, are going to go
on, the Medicaid of rules of our overburdened state governments. All of
that cost will be pushed down into property taxes. This is going to
have unintended consequences that will boggle your mind.

BRAZILE: I think we're going to spend the next six months once
again trying to debunk all of these myths and these lies and this
misinformation that's been floating around on the Internet over the last
couple of years.

The truth is that this is a strong bill that will provide relief,
not just to those individuals without insurance, but those individuals
with insurance who announced the premiums rise, by 25, 39 percent.
They're also concerned that they are one flu away or one sickness away
from losing their health insurance.

And yes for small businesses, this will give many individuals an
opportunity to finally be able to afford health care. There are so many
good benefits. If we start cherry picking apart all of the bad things
and then exploit some of the anger and frustration out there, then we'll
continue to have another six months of conversation to put out all of
the lies and all of the rumors.

TAPPER: Let's dig a little deeper into what George said because
it's not a completely insane point. George's point is that part of this
health care bill -- you like that I said it's not completely --

(CROSSTALK)

TAPPER: It's better than not completely insane. It's an astute
point. If you look at Washington politics, these tough decisions often
do get kicked down the road until they are kicked away completely. If
you look at the Medicare doc fix, how much doctors are supposed to be
reimbursed. That was done as cost saving and then they keep undoing it.

And the question is if these Medicare cuts to Medicare advantage,
and if these taxes, on these high so-called Cadillac tax, if these will
actually be enacted or not. And Paul and Donna, do you think that will
actually happen?

KRUGMAN: The actual history, most Medicare cost-saving measures
have in fact gone through as planned. So if people cherry pick a few
that have not and say, oh, you can't actually do anything. But the
history is in fact that most of them have in fact been implemented and
not reversed.

So the history is actually on our side here. And look, the fact is
that these things, like the Cadillac tax, they are going to be coming up
at a time when we'll be very much in. Now we need to get the budget
under control mode. The fact of the matter is, the timing is such that
just about the time that we're saying, OK, we ran up big debts to deal
with the great recession, now we have to do something to get the fiscal
balance under control. That's exactly when the Cadillac tax is going to
come along and people are going to say, oh, we're not go to do that,
then they'll be forced to come up with something else.

So I actually think this is all going to happen. I think it's -- if
anything, there are going to be more cost-saving measures down the road
because look, we are -- we do know that by 2018, 2020, fiscal issues are
going to be at the forefront. So I don't think this is at all
implausible. The logic of the situation says that the petty politics is
actually going to be pushed into the background.

TAPPER: George and Peggy, let me ask you a question. One of your
fellow pundits, David Frum was summarily dismissed from his position at
the American Enterprise Institute. Why he was, we're not going to get
into, but it occurred after he wrote a column that I want to ask you
about. He said that the passage of this bill was actually a waterloo
for Republicans. He wrote, "No illusions please. This bill will not be
repealed even if Republicans score a 1994 style landslide in November.
How many votes could we muster to reopen this donut hole and charge
seniors more for prescription drugs? How many votes to re-allow
insurers to rescind policies when they discover a pre-existing
condition? How many votes to banish 25 year olds from their parents
insurance coverage? We followed the most radical voices in the party and
the movement and they lad us to abject and irreversible defeat."

Peggy, did Republicans squander an opportunity here? Whether or not
you look at short-term gains that could happen, this bill is likely not
going anywhere. Should Republicans have gotten up to the table and
actually tried to contribute ideas?

NOONAN: A lot of Republicans feel they did go to the table and were
not so terribly welcomed there. You all know the stories. Olympia
Snowe tried it. Paul Ryan tried it. Tom Coburn, Bob Bennett. There
are a million names of people.

Bennett had a Bennett-Wyden bill that was so good, had the support
of Republicans and Democrats, covered so many people. The
administration and the Democratic-controlled Congress just stiffed it.

Republicans were there until they came to realize that they could
not get anything that they felt was reasonable. That the bill was being
tugged...

(CROSSTALK)

NOONAN: I'm sorry...

KRUGMAN: I wish I lived on Peggy's planet here.

NOONAN: Too far in the directions that they didn't want to go.
They didn't want public option, et cetera. Widen-Bennett was good.

WILL: The Wyden-Bennett bill, if the president had come out right
after his inauguration and said, I want to do two things, I want to
change the tone in Washington and I want to insure the uninsured.

By last August, he could have had that passed and the Wyden-Bennett
bill with 70 votes. It's one-nineteenth the length of the bill that was
passed. It's less intrusive and less coercive, which are virtues to
some of us and vices to the Obama administration.

KRUGMAN: Wyden-Bennett -- and this, we're going to lose the
audience here totally. Wyden-Bennett was a much more far-reaching
transformation of the whole way health care works...

WILL: Exactly.

KRUGMAN: ... which means that whatever people said about supporting
it, as it came closer the floor, it would have had mass defections. The
Obama -- "Obamacare" is conservative, not in a political sense, but in a
sort of ordinary life sense. It leaves the system that most Americans
have pretty much intact. And that was what made it possible.

You can say in the abstract, oh, people were in favor of the ideas
behind a radical transformation of the whole system. It wasn't going to
happen. This was going to happen and it did.

WILL: Well, I agree with Paul to this extent, that the Obama bill
is fundamentally timid in that it did not attack what everyone knows is
the source of our main problem, which is employer-provided health
insurance, which tangles up a high inflationary product, health
insurance, health care with the wage system in this country.

KRUGMAN: I guess I'm not everyone, because I don't agree. I mean,
the fundamental problem we have is third-party payment, which is
necessary. You can't run health care unless somebody pays -- else pays
the bills in extreme cases, which is where most of the money is.

But we don't have a system that is very good providing incentives to
limit costs. And this bill takes some important steps in that direction.

(CROSSTALK)

TAPPER: But I want to move on to another topic.

BRAZILE: But can I give a...

(CROSSTALK)

TAPPER: Donna, do -- yes, go ahead.

BRAZILE: David Frum, because Dave is a good person. It once again
shows that this -- the Republican Party has a small tent, that they are
not diverse and they are not welcoming. And I think it's bad for the
parties. Good for Democrats, though.

(CROSSTALK)

TAPPER: I just want to switch -- I want to switch topics for one
second, Peggy, because this is a lot on health care and we have a lot to
talk about today. But I do want to make one point and that is, the
Wyden-Bennett bill included an individual mandate, which is what all of
these states are suing the Obama administration over. It included an
individual mandate.

But moving on...

BRAZILE: That was a Nixon idea.

TAPPER: Because there's some good politics going on right now.
Over the weekend, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin was out there
stumping for her former boss, Senator John McCain in Arizona. We talked
to some of the people who attended these two rallies. And here's what
they had to say.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I came here to see Sarah Palin because she
totally rocks.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I am supporting J.D. Hayworth.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I wanted to see Sarah. I heard most of her
speech in there. I didn't agree with a lot of it, because we don't
support John McCain. I'm supporting J.D. Hayworth.

George, you were out in Arizona with J.D. Hayworth a few weeks ago.
What did you see?

WILL: He's a large, loud former sportscaster with a flair for
rousing the rabble. And he's a former congressman, so he's not new at
this business. In January, the Republican Central Committee in the
state of Arizona voted to close the primary, which is their right to do,
associational right. You can say Republicans -- only Republicans will
pick Republican leaders.

But that was a fundamentally hostile act to John McCain, whose
strength is not with the Republican Party, but with independents. So
this is going to be a race.

TAPPER: Peggy, is Sarah Palin doing any good for John McCain out there?

NOONAN: I think she is there for a number of reasons. Her
strategic purpose, I guess, is to give him right-wing street cred that
over 30 years...

TAPPER: Interesting term.

NOONAN: Yes. And that over 30 years he has lost.

However, the very tea party itself, this is a rising up of people
who have not always previously been in politics. There are a lot of
women in it, a lot of activists. They are going -- they are perhaps
part of a reconstituted and changing -- ever-changing big tent.

I don't happen to see the -- the conservative movement as becoming a
smaller tent, but I do see, I think, sometimes a tendency to forget that
conservatism, apart from being a great political philosophy, has within
it the spirit of a rebellion.

Sometimes, lately, it seems to take on the spirit of an orthodoxy --
do you know what I mean -- and of a strict ideology. That is not a good
thing. Let a thousand flowers bloom.

KRUGMAN: Not lately. It's been pretty much a rigid orthodoxy for
quite a long time.

But, you know, the interesting thing is this is John McCain, who,
you know, built his reputation, became beloved of talk shows like this
one as the great maverick now being forced to do a pretty good imitation
of a doctrinaire, die-hard, no-flexibility, right-wing Republican,
because that's the only way he can survive.

And that's telling you something has happened to the party. There
is no room in this party for the John McCain of 10 years ago, no room
for people who express a different point of view.

TAPPER: Donna, does the fact that McCain's in trouble show that the
maverick positions he did take in the past -- not 10 years ago but even
a few years ago, such as immigration reform, or even last year or 2008
on the Wall Street bailout, that he is no longer representative of the
Republican Party, or is it just -- or is he just an old -- is he an
anachronism, something -- a more moderate Republican?

BRAZILE: Well, I think John McCain is being John McCain, and that
is, he is trying to survive a very heated, difficult and perhaps, you
know, energized Republican primary.

I was at the Republican Convention, and what struck me when Sarah
Palin came to the floor is that she energized a four-car funeral. She's
trying to bring some energy and some life to John McCain. And I don't
think that's, for her -- I mean, for him, it's a good thing, but for the
Democrats, I don't think it hurts us at all to have Sarah Palin out
there, whipping up the base, whipping up the tea parties. Stir up as
much tea as you want.

(CROSSTALK)

It's producing a lot of coffee drinkers within the Democratic Party.

NOONAN: Sometimes I feel that we all forget the big center that
doesn't show up in politics all the time and isn't always that
politically engaged but is watching and shows up to vote.

TAPPER: We only have time for one topic. And I want to throw out
the fact that this has not been the greatest month in the history of
U.S.-Israel relations.

Paul, was this conflict, the showdown with Netanyahu -- was this
inevitable?

KRUGMAN: I think so. Actually, my colleague Tom Friedman had a
good thing to say about that. He said that it used to be that making
peace was -- you know, was an important job for Israel and, sort of, a
hobby for the United States.

And now it seems to be the other way around.

The United States has huge interests in reaching some kind of
solution to the Israel-Palestinian problem. Israel no longer seems
particularly interested in it, or at least the current governing
coalition in Israel doesn't seem interested.

So, sure, there's a big tension, and this is the problem. And, you
know, I think Netanyahu isn't in control of his own coalition. I mean,
I don't think it was a deliberate, top-down decision to start new
housing developments in Jerusalem right at that most sensitive moment.

It's his own -- it's his own junior partners who are out of control
there, and this is a problem for Obama. It's a problem for America.

WILL: U.S.-Israeli relations are worse now than they have been in
the 62 years that Israel has existed. It's the only nation in the world
with which we have worse relations. What nation is that? It's the only
democracy in the Middle East, the only salient of our values in that
inhospitable region, the only reliable ally there. And we are treating
it as a problem because the Jews in a Jewish section of Jerusalem have
decided to builds 1,600 housing units.

It is the law of the land, expressed in the 1995 Jerusalem Embassy
Act, that Jerusalem shall be the united capital of the state of Israel,
period.

TAPPER: Donna?

BRAZILE: Well, our -- the bond is still strong between the Israeli
people and Americans. I think the relationship is rocky now. But long
term, the Obama administration is clearly committed to a safe and secure
Israel, but they also would like to see the Palestinians and Israelis
come back to the table.

WILL: Out of the way -- the Obama administration's position is that
we will be used by the Palestinians as the intermediaries in proximity
talks, make the Palestinians talk to the Israelis.

TAPPER: All right. Well, we're going to have to continue this
discussion in the green room. The roundtable will continue that on
abcnews.com.